Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Tomorrow It Will Be Better (Dutch: Morgen gaat het beter) is a 1939 Dutch film directed by Frederic Zelnik. Cast. Lily Bouwmeester as Willy Verhulst, het schoolmeisje;
Deze jas is het duurst(e). ("This coat is (the) most expensive") Dit huis is het grootst(e). ("This house is (the) biggest.") Onze auto rijdt het hardst(e) van allemaal. ("Our car drives (the) fastest of all.") The first sentence meaning "This coat is the most expensive" has the same meaning as the first sentence further above.
Episode Film or episode title Paul June Jason Guest(s) Release date Notes 1 "Burlesque" Nick Kroll: December 21, 2010 (): This episode was re-released on January 1, 2021 with new content from the hosts in the introduction to belatedly commemorate the podcast's 10-year anniversary
The House of the Mosque (Dutch: Het huis van de moskee) is a Dutch-language novel by Iranian writer Kader Abdolah, published in 2005. The English language translation of The House of the Mosque was published in January 2010.
Cruijff at Camp Nou, 2009. Cruijffiaans [1] is the name given to the way of speaking, or a collection of sayings, made famous [2] by Dutch association football player and coach Johan Cruijff (1947–2016), particularly "one-liners that hover somewhere between the brilliant and the banal". [3]
Silvio Alberto (Tip) Marugg (1923–2006) was a Dutch-Curaçaoan writer and poet, best known for his 1988 novel De morgen loeit weer aan (translated into English as The Roar of Morning [1]). His style is best characterized as a variation on magic realism.
"Morgen" is a popular song (1959), originally performed in German by Croatian singer Ivo Robić and The Song-Masters, accompanied by Bert Kaempfert and his orchestra. 1959 single by Ivo Robić "Morgen"
Heute hier, morgen dort (German for "Today here, tomorrow there" or "day to day") is a song by Hannes Wader. The song first appeared in 1972 on his album 7 Lieder (7 Songs). The melody comes from the song Indian Summer by the American musician Gary Bolstad who studied veterinary medicine in Berlin in the 1960s and performed in folk clubs.